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Treating Chronic Illness Post-SHTF - Chapter 1 - COPD (and introduction to the series)

2022.07.25 03:10 MitchMed Treating Chronic Illness Post-SHTF - Chapter 1 - COPD (and introduction to the series)

Hey everyone!
I'm a American Registered Nurse and prepper enthusiast who takes an interest in survival medicine, firearms, and preps. Today I want to introduce a new series I've been working on. I've noticed that there are hundreds of books on the market talking about treating acute illness (bone breaks, cuts, trauma, chest wounds, swamp feet) but there are not a lot of resources for chronic illness. According to the AHA, nearly half of the population (133 million) people suffer from a chronic illness.
Disclaimer: I'm not writing these for money, I don't have advertisers or a website or any ulterior motives. I don't want you to click on any weird links or buy anything. I might make these into a book someday, but for now, I'm just going to stick to posting on reddit. Also, this isn't medical advice and I'm not a physician. Depending on how these go I may make more for other chronic conditions. My goal is 50-100 chronic conditions before I turn it into a book.
The goal of these articles is to provide you with:

Anyways, here we go. Chapter 1 - COPD


Treating Chronic Illness Post-SHTF - Chapter 1
COPD/Emphysema
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Description: A chronic disease that affects the ability of the lungs to bring oxygen into the bloodstream, most often caused by a lifetime of smoke exposure (including cigarettes). Permanently damaged air sacs in the lungs have difficulty exchanging oxygen and co2. COPD (both diagnosed and undiagnosed) affects millions of Americans every year. Different stages of COPD exist, from mild to severe. COPD is irreversible due to damage to the air sacs (called alveoli) that are responsible for the exchange of oxygen and co2 (a byproduct of metabolism) in the body. Depending on the severity, COPD may be treated with daily short-acting steroids, long-acting steroids, inhalers, supplemental oxygen, and antibiotics.
COPD exacerbation is often due to respiratory infection (even a simple cold can be problematic for patients with lung disease) or airway irritants like smoke. COPD exacerbation can result in insufficient oxygen exchange and result in hypoxia (low oxygen content in the blood) and hypoxemia (low oxygen supply to muscles and organs, including the heart and brain).

Typical presentation:

Medications: Common medications used to treat COPD are:
Inhalers – fast-acting inhalers like albuterol relax the muscles in the airway to ease breathing and increase airflow. Used for wheezing and sudden breathing tightness/difficulty.
Steroids – both inhalable and oral steroids are used to control airway inflammation during times of COPD exacerbation, or for routine daily use to keep COPD symptoms controlled.
Antibiotics – COPD flair up is commonly caused by respiratory tract infections treatable with oral antibiotics.

Scavenge list (keep any eye out for these medications when scavenging or trading):

Tips/Avoid

Recommended Equipment:
In addition to any general medical prep, be sure you have:
  1. Healthy adults and children will read 95-100%. Typically adults with begin to feel short of breath in the low-90's.
  2. Adults with COPD should know their baseline, but it is generally 88% or better. Some COPD patients can experience levels in the low-80's without the feeling of shortness of breath.
  3. Cold fingers or poor blood flow may artificially skew the pulse ox reading. Try multiple fingers, try warming up the fingers, and if that doesn't work try the lobe or top of the ear.


A special note for COPD patients needing supplemental oxygen:
Unfortunately, the outlook is not good for those dependent on supplemental oxygen during the apocalypse. Oxygen is measured in liters per minute and typically ranges from 1-5 LPM of flow. Those who use 1-2LPM of oxygen may be able to ween themselves off, but those using 3-4L of oxygen will likely face serious repercussions if their oxygen machine (concentrator) fails or no electricity is available.
Additional oxygen tanks are not easy to come by, and even so, they don't last very long. Your typical small oxygen tank (M9 tank) lasts only 2-3 hours at 2 liters per minute. A larger tank may last 4-8 hours, but it's not really feasible to gather enough oxygen tanks to ride out a long grid-down situation.
If faced with the inevitability of losing oxygen supply, I recommend weaning the oxygen slowly. Decrease by 1LPM every hour. Start the weaning process early and adjust activity to compensate. Track the pulse oximetry reading as you adjust the flow, and track the reading during any subsequent activity.



This article may be edited as I discover new and useful information that I may not have initially thought of.

https://www.lung.org/lung-health-diseases/lung-disease-lookup/copd/living-with-copd/physical-activity https://www.everydayhealth.com/hs/copd/triggers/ https://erj.ersjournals.com/content/27/3/542#:~:text=Exposure%20to%20wood%20or%20charcoal,was%20also%20related%20to%20COPD. https://www.healthline.com/health/copd/drugs#methylxanthines https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/copd/symptoms-causes/syc-20353679#:~:text=Chronic%20obstructive%20pulmonary%20disease%20(COPD,(sputum)%20production%20and%20wheezing. 
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